fbpx
Wikipedia

Hurstville, New South Wales

Hurstville is a town in Southern Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. It is 16 km (9.9 mi) south of the Sydney CBD and is part of the St George area. Hurstville is the administrative centre of the local government area of the Georges River Council.

Hurstville
SydneyNew South Wales
Hurstville Library
Population31,162 (2021 census)[1]
 • Density7,420/km2 (19,220/sq mi)
Established1887
Postcode(s)2220
Elevation75 m (246 ft)
Area4.2 km2 (1.6 sq mi)
Location16 km (10 mi) south of Sydney CBD
LGA(s)Georges River Council
State electorate(s)
Federal division(s)
Location map of Hurstville based on NASA satellite images
Memorial Square, Forest Road, Hurstville

The suburb is predominantly Asian Australian in character, with 63% of the population of Asian origin, among the highest in the country.[2] Sometimes described as "Sydney's Real Chinatown", an estimated 37% of residents are immigrants from mainland China.[3]

History edit

The name Hurstville is derived from the English 'hurst', meaning 'a wooded eminence', and 'ville', meaning 'town'.[4]

Aboriginal culture edit

Although it is unknown when they first settled in the Hurstville area, the first inhabitants were Indigenous Australians. At the time of the arrival of the First Fleet, the Indigenous Australians residing in the area were of the Eora tribe, whose numbers spanned along the Georges River, from Botany Bay to present-day Liverpool.

European settlement edit

The first sustained contact between members of the First Fleet and the Eora tribe occurred on 20 January 1788 within the boundaries of the present City of Hurstville at Lugarno and Oatley, at Lime Kiln Bay on the Georges River, as recorded by Lieutenant Philip Gidley King in his diary.[5] While Governor Philip explored the south side of the Georges River around Como, King with a party of one other officer and three marines in a six-oared rowboat aimed for the highest point they could see on the north side, probably at Lugarno, and landed at a place they named Lance Point. Although first contact with the Indigenous Australians led to a small altercation where a spear was thrown and a shot fired, later in the day when the party rowed up Lime Kiln Bay towards present day Mortdale they were greeted in a friendly manner by both men and women, and what could only be described as Australia's first picnic took place as food and drink were shared between the two peoples. After a long summer afternoon of mutual contact and conviviality the British sailors rowed back to their ship moored at Botany Bay (see Haworth R.J. 2012, Journal of Australian Colonial History, vol. 14 pp. 1–28, for a reconstruction of King's boat journey and likely route).

The land of the Hurstville region was granted by the government of the new colony of New South Wales to two men: Captain John Townson and his brother Robert Townson in 1808. Captain John Townson was granted 1,950 acres (7.9 km2) of land which is now occupied by the suburb of Hurstville and part of Bexley. Robert Townson was granted the land which is now occupied by Penshurst, Mortdale and parts of Peakhurst. In the same year, in the area now known as Riverwood land grants were made to Jane Trotter, Mary Shepley, Charles Doudall, and James Ryan. Later in 1816 another land grant in the same area was given to Mary Redman.

In 1809, Captain John Townson was granted an additional 250 acres (1.0 km2) in the area now occupied by Kingsgrove and Beverly Hills. The Townson brothers were not happy with the land that they were given because it was not suitable for the farming of sheep for wool and it is likely that the brothers never occupied their land. In 1812, a wealthy merchant named Simeon Lord bought the land of Captain John Townson and named it Lord's Forest. When Lord died, the land became the property of John Rose Holden and James Holt of the Bank of NSW.

Sproule family edit

Gladwyn is an historic, Italianate house at 96 Queens Road. It was built in 1893 by John Sproule, a local builder and alderman of Hurstville Council, who had acquired the land two years previously. It changed hands many times and was known as Gladwyn by 1906. Hurstville Council eventually acquired the house in 1986. It has been restored and adapted for commercial use, as well as serving as the base for the Hurstville Archival Research and Local Studies Centre. It is heritage-listed at state and local level.[6][7]

In 1895, Ann Sproule bought land on the opposite side of Queens Road from the Winn brothers of Newcastle, New South Wales. John Sproule then built Yarra-Mundi in 1897, and lived there until 1904. The house then changed hands a number of times over the years. In 1981 it was acquired by the Danebank Church of England School for Girls. The school later sold the house in 2003 and it was subsequently adapted for commercial use. It is heritage-listed.[8]

Development edit

 
Forest Road on the 9 November 1951. Photograph taken by Sam Hood for LJ Hooker, State Library of New South Wales, 31762

A dam with a roadway on top was constructed on the Cooks River at Tempe in 1839. In 1843, the road that was to become known as Forest Road was extended from the dam to a hand-winched punt in Lugarno. On the other side of the river, the road continued all the way to Wollongong; however, it was only suitable for travellers on horseback. The new road opened up the Hurstville region and created a settlement at Bottle Forest, now known as Heathcote.

In 1850, the Lord Forest estate was purchased by Michael Gannon (1800–61), who subdivided it into small farms along what is now Croydon Road and three larger farms that were purchased by Dent, Peake, and Ibbotson.[9] The area became known as Gannon's Forest. The land originally granted to Robert Townson was purchased by John Connell in 1830 and, following his death in 1849, the estate was inherited by his grandsons, Elias Pearson Laycock and John Connell Laycock.

The Gannon's Forest post office opened in 1881. The local school was named "Hurstville" by School Inspector MacIntyre when it was established in 1876. When the railway station opened on 15 October 1884, it took the name Hurstville, from the school. Hurstville municipality was incorporated in 1887 and, in 1988, Hurstville was declared a city. The Centenary Bakery on Forest Road is a historic building that has been preserved and once housed a museum. The St George Regional Museum is now located in another historic building in MacMahon Street.

The Hurstville train crash on 3 August 1920 resulted in five people killed and fifty injured. It involved the collision of two steam trains, one arriving from Central Railway Station, which plunged into the back of the other, which was stationary at Hurstville railway station, bound for Sutherland.[10]

Hurstville's residential developments are a mixture of low-density housing, medium-density flats, and high-density apartment buildings.

Economy edit

 
The Global Chambers office building

Hurstville is the central business district of the St George area. It is a large, multiethnic suburb with a multitude of commercial buildings and high-rise residential buildings dominating the skyline.

The commercial area is centred on the main street, Forest Road, on the northern side of Hurstville railway station. Forest Road is the main shopping street which features branches of many retail shops as well as numerous banks (Commonwealth, ANZ, National Australia Bank, Westpac, St George, HSBC, Bank of China) and other financial institutions. The commercial developments also extend to surrounding streets concentrated from Queens Road to The Avenue and on the southern side of Hurstville Railway station, around Ormonde Parade. The commercial developments extend further along Forest Road, west towards Penshurst and east towards Bexley.

Retail and shopping edit

 
Westfield Hurstville

Hurstville has two major shopping centres, Westfield Hurstville and Hurstville Central. There are also a few smaller shopping centres such as Hurstville Times Plaza, East Quarter, Metro Centre, Hurstville City Centre and Union Arcade.

Restaurants and cafes edit

Hurstville has a wide variety of restaurants and cafes and is known as a major dining destination in the St George area of Sydney. There are a large number of Chinese (including Cantonese), Japanese and Vietnamese restaurants and eateries.

Other edit

The administrative offices of the Georges River Council are located in the Hurstville Civic Centre in MacMahon Street. This street also features a number of historic buildings such as the Friendly Pharmacy, old Fire Station, Ritz Hotel and Hurstville Museum & Gallery (formerly known as the St George Regional Museum), which houses the cake decorating collection formerly held at the Australian Cakes and Sugar Art Museum. Hurstville City Library is located nearby on Queens Road.

Culture edit

The St Clair Recording Studio operated for about a year from December 1965 to December 1966 and recorded the Bee Gees among other musicians.[11] AC/DC played at the Hurstville Civic Centre (Marana Hall/Rivoli Hall) on eight occasions between 1974 and 1977.

A karaoke place opened in 2011 near the Meridian Hotel, the first ever one in Hurstville.

The Hurstville Museum & Gallery focuses on local history, art, and culture. According to the Museum's website, it "is home to high quality exhibitions, a diverse range of public programs and a collection of approximately 5,000 objects and artworks from the local area."[12]

Transport edit

 
Hurstville railway station

Hurstville railway station is a major station on the T4 Eastern Suburbs & Illawarra Line of the Sydney Trains network and the South Coast Line on the NSW TrainLink network. All Suburban and Intercity trains stop at Hurstville. Hurstville is 20 minutes from Sydney Central railway station on the express service. Hurstville is a major bus interchange with bus services departing from Forest Road and Ormonde Parade.

Hurstville is also serviced by St George Community Transport, a HACC funded transport service for the Frail Aged, people with disability and their carers.[13]

Churches edit

  • St George's Hurstville Anglican Church
  • St Michael's Roman Catholic Church
  • Hurstville Presbyterian Church
  • Hurstville Church of Christ
  • Hurstville Uniting Church
  • Hurstville Seventh-day Adventist Church
  • Hurstville Assemblies of God
  • Salvation Army
  • Church of the Living God

Schools edit

Landmarks edit

  • Hurstville Civic Centre, Hurstville Entertainment Centre, Hurstville City Library, St George Regional Museum, Park Plaza Apartments

Parks edit

  • Kempt Field, Woodville Park, Hurstville Park, Thorpe Park, Doyle Gardens.

Population edit

 
Apartments on MacMahon Street

Demographics edit

Historical population
YearPop.±%
200120,371—    
200623,331+14.5%
201126,040+11.6%
201629,822+14.5%
202131,162+4.5%

The first European settlers in the area were mostly of British and Irish ancestry. From the late 1960s, Hurstville, like many surrounding areas, became home to migrants from all around the world. The first wave of migrants included Greeks and Italians who began moving south from Sydney's inner-city suburbs. They were followed by more European migrants, including many from the former Yugoslavia.

From the 1990s, the Chinese community within Hurstville has grown considerably. Much of this was related to significant migration from Hong Kong during the 1990s and migration from Mainland China during the 2000s. Many local businesses are operated by people of Chinese background, the interests of which are advanced by the St. George Asian Business Association. Hurstville is a hub for Asian groceries, food and services.[14]

According to the 2016 Australian Bureau of Statistics Census of Population, there were 29,822 residents in Hurstville. 27.8% of people were born in Australia. The most common countries of birth were China 36.9%, Nepal 7.1%, Hong Kong 4.0%, Indonesia 1.8% and India 1.5%. 18.1% of people only spoke English at home. Other languages spoken at home included Mandarin 32.3%, Cantonese 17.9%, Nepali 7.2%, Arabic 2.8% and Greek 2.5%. The most common responses for religion were No Religion 42.7%, Catholic 11.8%, Hinduism 8.2% and Buddhism 8.1%. The most common ancestries in Hurstville were Chinese 49.4%, English 6.6%, Nepalese 6.6%, Australian 5.1% and Greek 2.9% and 1.3% Filipinos.[1]

Notable residents edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Australian Bureau of Statistics (28 June 2022). "Hurstville (State Suburb)". 2021 Census QuickStats. Retrieved 15 February 2022.  
  2. ^ Forrest, James (5 July 2017). "Suburbs 'swamped' by Asians and Muslims? The data show a different story". The Conversation. Retrieved 6 August 2022.
  3. ^ "Hurstville: Sydney's Real Chinatown, Civic Sinoburbia". Civic Sinoburbia. Retrieved 7 August 2022.
  4. ^ . www.georgesriver.nsw.gov.au. Archived from the original on 29 August 2007.
  5. ^ King, Phillip Gidley (1980). The Journal of Philip Gidley King: Lieutenant, R. N., 1787 1790. Australian Documents Library. pp. 27–29. ISBN 0908219016. soon after discovered a number of ye natives who halloo'd & made signs for us to return to our boats
  6. ^ "Heritage". NSW Environment and Heritage.
  7. ^ "Hurstville Council" (PDF).
  8. ^ State Heritage Register
  9. ^ Lawrence, Joan (1996). St George Pictorial Memories: Rockdale, Kogarah, Hurstville. Kingsclear Books Pty Ltd. ISBN 9780908272457.
  10. ^ Pollon, F. (1990.) The Book of Sydney Suburbs, Angus & Robertson Publishers, Sydney, p. 130.
  11. ^ . www.georgesriver.nsw.gov.au. Archived from the original on 17 March 2011.
  12. ^ "Georges River Council - ART AND CULTURE". www.georgesriver.nsw.gov.au. Retrieved 23 April 2019.
  13. ^ "Community Transport, Transport, Mortdale, St George Community Transport, Car, Bus". www.stgct.org.au.
  14. ^ "Hurstville Suburb Profile". Sydney Suburb Reviews. June 2020. Retrieved 1 June 2020.
  15. ^ Sweeting, A.J. "Allen, Arthur Samuel (Tubby) (1894–1959)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. ISSN 1833-7538. Retrieved 30 March 2015.
  16. ^ Wikipedia
  17. ^ a b c d Australian Dictionary of Biography

External links edit

  • Georges River Council website
  • Businesses in Hurstville
  • Georges River Council - History of Hurstville
  • St George & Sutherland Shire Leader

33°58′05″S 151°06′15″E / 33.96811°S 151.10408°E / -33.96811; 151.10408

hurstville, south, wales, hurstville, redirects, here, other, uses, hurstville, disambiguation, hurstville, town, southern, sydney, south, wales, australia, south, sydney, part, george, area, hurstville, administrative, centre, local, government, area, georges. Hurstville redirects here For other uses see Hurstville disambiguation Hurstville is a town in Southern Sydney New South Wales Australia It is 16 km 9 9 mi south of the Sydney CBD and is part of the St George area Hurstville is the administrative centre of the local government area of the Georges River Council Hurstville Sydney New South WalesHurstville LibraryPopulation31 162 2021 census 1 Density7 420 km2 19 220 sq mi Established1887Postcode s 2220Elevation75 m 246 ft Area4 2 km2 1 6 sq mi Location16 km 10 mi south of Sydney CBDLGA s Georges River CouncilState electorate s KogarahOatleyFederal division s BanksBartonSuburbs around Hurstville Beverly Hills Kingsgrove BexleyPenshurst Hurstville CarltonHurstville Grove South Hurstville Allawah Location map of Hurstville based on NASA satellite images Memorial Square Forest Road Hurstville The suburb is predominantly Asian Australian in character with 63 of the population of Asian origin among the highest in the country 2 Sometimes described as Sydney s Real Chinatown an estimated 37 of residents are immigrants from mainland China 3 Contents 1 History 1 1 Aboriginal culture 1 2 European settlement 1 3 Sproule family 1 4 Development 2 Economy 2 1 Retail and shopping 2 2 Restaurants and cafes 2 3 Other 3 Culture 4 Transport 5 Churches 6 Schools 7 Landmarks 8 Parks 9 Population 9 1 Demographics 10 Notable residents 11 References 12 External linksHistory editThe name Hurstville is derived from the English hurst meaning a wooded eminence and ville meaning town 4 Aboriginal culture edit Although it is unknown when they first settled in the Hurstville area the first inhabitants were Indigenous Australians At the time of the arrival of the First Fleet the Indigenous Australians residing in the area were of the Eora tribe whose numbers spanned along the Georges River from Botany Bay to present day Liverpool European settlement edit The first sustained contact between members of the First Fleet and the Eora tribe occurred on 20 January 1788 within the boundaries of the present City of Hurstville at Lugarno and Oatley at Lime Kiln Bay on the Georges River as recorded by Lieutenant Philip Gidley King in his diary 5 While Governor Philip explored the south side of the Georges River around Como King with a party of one other officer and three marines in a six oared rowboat aimed for the highest point they could see on the north side probably at Lugarno and landed at a place they named Lance Point Although first contact with the Indigenous Australians led to a small altercation where a spear was thrown and a shot fired later in the day when the party rowed up Lime Kiln Bay towards present day Mortdale they were greeted in a friendly manner by both men and women and what could only be described as Australia s first picnic took place as food and drink were shared between the two peoples After a long summer afternoon of mutual contact and conviviality the British sailors rowed back to their ship moored at Botany Bay see Haworth R J 2012 Journal of Australian Colonial History vol 14 pp 1 28 for a reconstruction of King s boat journey and likely route The land of the Hurstville region was granted by the government of the new colony of New South Wales to two men Captain John Townson and his brother Robert Townson in 1808 Captain John Townson was granted 1 950 acres 7 9 km2 of land which is now occupied by the suburb of Hurstville and part of Bexley Robert Townson was granted the land which is now occupied by Penshurst Mortdale and parts of Peakhurst In the same year in the area now known as Riverwood land grants were made to Jane Trotter Mary Shepley Charles Doudall and James Ryan Later in 1816 another land grant in the same area was given to Mary Redman In 1809 Captain John Townson was granted an additional 250 acres 1 0 km2 in the area now occupied by Kingsgrove and Beverly Hills The Townson brothers were not happy with the land that they were given because it was not suitable for the farming of sheep for wool and it is likely that the brothers never occupied their land In 1812 a wealthy merchant named Simeon Lord bought the land of Captain John Townson and named it Lord s Forest When Lord died the land became the property of John Rose Holden and James Holt of the Bank of NSW Sproule family edit Gladwyn is an historic Italianate house at 96 Queens Road It was built in 1893 by John Sproule a local builder and alderman of Hurstville Council who had acquired the land two years previously It changed hands many times and was known as Gladwyn by 1906 Hurstville Council eventually acquired the house in 1986 It has been restored and adapted for commercial use as well as serving as the base for the Hurstville Archival Research and Local Studies Centre It is heritage listed at state and local level 6 7 In 1895 Ann Sproule bought land on the opposite side of Queens Road from the Winn brothers of Newcastle New South Wales John Sproule then built Yarra Mundi in 1897 and lived there until 1904 The house then changed hands a number of times over the years In 1981 it was acquired by the Danebank Church of England School for Girls The school later sold the house in 2003 and it was subsequently adapted for commercial use It is heritage listed 8 Development edit nbsp Forest Road on the 9 November 1951 Photograph taken by Sam Hood for LJ Hooker State Library of New South Wales 31762 A dam with a roadway on top was constructed on the Cooks River at Tempe in 1839 In 1843 the road that was to become known as Forest Road was extended from the dam to a hand winched punt in Lugarno On the other side of the river the road continued all the way to Wollongong however it was only suitable for travellers on horseback The new road opened up the Hurstville region and created a settlement at Bottle Forest now known as Heathcote In 1850 the Lord Forest estate was purchased by Michael Gannon 1800 61 who subdivided it into small farms along what is now Croydon Road and three larger farms that were purchased by Dent Peake and Ibbotson 9 The area became known as Gannon s Forest The land originally granted to Robert Townson was purchased by John Connell in 1830 and following his death in 1849 the estate was inherited by his grandsons Elias Pearson Laycock and John Connell Laycock The Gannon s Forest post office opened in 1881 The local school was named Hurstville by School Inspector MacIntyre when it was established in 1876 When the railway station opened on 15 October 1884 it took the name Hurstville from the school Hurstville municipality was incorporated in 1887 and in 1988 Hurstville was declared a city The Centenary Bakery on Forest Road is a historic building that has been preserved and once housed a museum The St George Regional Museum is now located in another historic building in MacMahon Street The Hurstville train crash on 3 August 1920 resulted in five people killed and fifty injured It involved the collision of two steam trains one arriving from Central Railway Station which plunged into the back of the other which was stationary at Hurstville railway station bound for Sutherland 10 Hurstville s residential developments are a mixture of low density housing medium density flats and high density apartment buildings Economy edit nbsp The Global Chambers office building Hurstville is the central business district of the St George area It is a large multiethnic suburb with a multitude of commercial buildings and high rise residential buildings dominating the skyline The commercial area is centred on the main street Forest Road on the northern side of Hurstville railway station Forest Road is the main shopping street which features branches of many retail shops as well as numerous banks Commonwealth ANZ National Australia Bank Westpac St George HSBC Bank of China and other financial institutions The commercial developments also extend to surrounding streets concentrated from Queens Road to The Avenue and on the southern side of Hurstville Railway station around Ormonde Parade The commercial developments extend further along Forest Road west towards Penshurst and east towards Bexley Retail and shopping edit nbsp Westfield Hurstville Hurstville has two major shopping centres Westfield Hurstville and Hurstville Central There are also a few smaller shopping centres such as Hurstville Times Plaza East Quarter Metro Centre Hurstville City Centre and Union Arcade Restaurants and cafes edit Hurstville has a wide variety of restaurants and cafes and is known as a major dining destination in the St George area of Sydney There are a large number of Chinese including Cantonese Japanese and Vietnamese restaurants and eateries Other edit The administrative offices of the Georges River Council are located in the Hurstville Civic Centre in MacMahon Street This street also features a number of historic buildings such as the Friendly Pharmacy old Fire Station Ritz Hotel and Hurstville Museum amp Gallery formerly known as the St George Regional Museum which houses the cake decorating collection formerly held at the Australian Cakes and Sugar Art Museum Hurstville City Library is located nearby on Queens Road Culture editThe St Clair Recording Studio operated for about a year from December 1965 to December 1966 and recorded the Bee Gees among other musicians 11 AC DC played at the Hurstville Civic Centre Marana Hall Rivoli Hall on eight occasions between 1974 and 1977 A karaoke place opened in 2011 near the Meridian Hotel the first ever one in Hurstville The Hurstville Museum amp Gallery focuses on local history art and culture According to the Museum s website it is home to high quality exhibitions a diverse range of public programs and a collection of approximately 5 000 objects and artworks from the local area 12 Transport edit nbsp Hurstville railway stationHurstville railway station is a major station on the T4 Eastern Suburbs amp Illawarra Line of the Sydney Trains network and the South Coast Line on the NSW TrainLink network All Suburban and Intercity trains stop at Hurstville Hurstville is 20 minutes from Sydney Central railway station on the express service Hurstville is a major bus interchange with bus services departing from Forest Road and Ormonde Parade Hurstville is also serviced by St George Community Transport a HACC funded transport service for the Frail Aged people with disability and their carers 13 Churches editSt George s Hurstville Anglican Church St Michael s Roman Catholic Church Hurstville Presbyterian Church Hurstville Church of Christ Hurstville Uniting Church Hurstville Seventh day Adventist Church Hurstville Assemblies of God Salvation Army Church of the Living God nbsp St George s Hurstville Anglican Church nbsp Hurstville Uniting Church nbsp Hurstville Presbyterian Church nbsp Church of Christ nbsp Hurstville Baptist ChurchSchools editHurstville Adventist School Hurstville Boys High School Hurstville Public School Hurstville South Public School Danebank Anglican Girls School Hurstville Grove Infants School Beverly Hills Public School and St George Christian School Sydney Technical High School Bethany College and St Mary s Star of the Sea Catholic Primary School all located just over the border in Bexley nbsp Hurstville Public School nbsp Bethany College nbsp Sydney Technical High School nbsp Danebank Girls SchoolLandmarks editHurstville Civic Centre Hurstville Entertainment Centre Hurstville City Library St George Regional Museum Park Plaza Apartments nbsp Friendly Pharmacy MacMahon Street nbsp Centenary Bakery Forest Road nbsp Old Fire Station MacMahon Street nbsp Meridian Hotel nbsp Hurstville City Museum amp Gallery nbsp Hurstville Ritz Hotel Forest Road nbsp Hurstville Entertainment Centre nbsp former State Bank building Hurstville nbsp Lorne The Avenue nbsp Terraced housing on The AvenueParks editKempt Field Woodville Park Hurstville Park Thorpe Park Doyle Gardens nbsp Woodville Park nbsp Hurstville OvalPopulation edit nbsp Apartments on MacMahon Street Demographics edit Historical populationYearPop 200120 371 200623 331 14 5 201126 040 11 6 201629 822 14 5 202131 162 4 5 The first European settlers in the area were mostly of British and Irish ancestry From the late 1960s Hurstville like many surrounding areas became home to migrants from all around the world The first wave of migrants included Greeks and Italians who began moving south from Sydney s inner city suburbs They were followed by more European migrants including many from the former Yugoslavia From the 1990s the Chinese community within Hurstville has grown considerably Much of this was related to significant migration from Hong Kong during the 1990s and migration from Mainland China during the 2000s Many local businesses are operated by people of Chinese background the interests of which are advanced by the St George Asian Business Association Hurstville is a hub for Asian groceries food and services 14 According to the 2016 Australian Bureau of Statistics Census of Population there were 29 822 residents in Hurstville 27 8 of people were born in Australia The most common countries of birth were China 36 9 Nepal 7 1 Hong Kong 4 0 Indonesia 1 8 and India 1 5 18 1 of people only spoke English at home Other languages spoken at home included Mandarin 32 3 Cantonese 17 9 Nepali 7 2 Arabic 2 8 and Greek 2 5 The most common responses for religion were No Religion 42 7 Catholic 11 8 Hinduism 8 2 and Buddhism 8 1 The most common ancestries in Hurstville were Chinese 49 4 English 6 6 Nepalese 6 6 Australian 5 1 and Greek 2 9 and 1 3 Filipinos 1 Notable residents editCecil Abbott AO QPM Commissioner of the New South Wales Police 1981 1984 Ronald Ernest Aitchison Physicist Arthur Samuel Allen 1894 1959 Army officer and accountant audit clerk in NSW Government Railways 15 Ezekiel Baker Politician Roy Bossi 1894 1964 Rugby league player Jack Brabham 1926 2014 Three time Formula One World Champion motor racer 16 Jayden Brailey rugby league player playing for the Newcastle Knights Matthew Dufty rugby league player playing for the Warrington Wolves Ambrose George Enticknap 1894 1976 Orchardist and politician 17 Stella Maria Sarah Miles Franklin Writer Neville Hayes Swimmer Arthur Justice 1902 1977 Rugby league player coach and administrator Thomas John Ley 1880 1947 Politician and murderer 17 Jack Lindwall Rugby league player for St George Ray Lindwall Test cricketer also played rugby league for St George younger brother of Jack Craig Nicholls Musician Eris Michael O Brien 1895 1974 Catholic archbishop and Australian historian 17 Kerry O Keeffe test cricketer and sportscaster Kurtis Patterson test cricketer Riley Price rugby league player playing for the North Queensland Cowboys Gordon Stanley Reid 1923 1989 Parliamentary official political scientist and governor 17 Ken Rosewall Tennis player Michael Rush champion sculler spent his last years farming a Hurstville small holding References edit a b Australian Bureau of Statistics 28 June 2022 Hurstville State Suburb 2021 Census QuickStats Retrieved 15 February 2022 nbsp Forrest James 5 July 2017 Suburbs swamped by Asians and Muslims The data show a different story The Conversation Retrieved 6 August 2022 Hurstville Sydney s Real Chinatown Civic Sinoburbia Civic Sinoburbia Retrieved 7 August 2022 Georges River Council Home www georgesriver nsw gov au Archived from the original on 29 August 2007 King Phillip Gidley 1980 The Journal of Philip Gidley King Lieutenant R N 1787 1790 Australian Documents Library pp 27 29 ISBN 0908219016 soon after discovered a number of ye natives who halloo d amp made signs for us to return to our boats Heritage NSW Environment and Heritage Hurstville Council PDF State Heritage Register Lawrence Joan 1996 St George Pictorial Memories Rockdale Kogarah Hurstville Kingsclear Books Pty Ltd ISBN 9780908272457 Pollon F 1990 The Book of Sydney Suburbs Angus amp Robertson Publishers Sydney p 130 Georges River Council Home www georgesriver nsw gov au Archived from the original on 17 March 2011 Georges River Council ART AND CULTURE www georgesriver nsw gov au Retrieved 23 April 2019 Community Transport Transport Mortdale St George Community Transport Car Bus www stgct org au Hurstville Suburb Profile Sydney Suburb Reviews June 2020 Retrieved 1 June 2020 Sweeting A J Allen Arthur Samuel Tubby 1894 1959 Australian Dictionary of Biography National Centre of Biography Australian National University ISSN 1833 7538 Retrieved 30 March 2015 Wikipedia a b c d Australian Dictionary of Biography nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hurstville New South Wales External links editGeorges River Council website Businesses in Hurstville Georges River Council History of Hurstville St George amp Sutherland Shire Leader 33 58 05 S 151 06 15 E 33 96811 S 151 10408 E 33 96811 151 10408 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hurstville New South Wales amp oldid 1219696594, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.